Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Goyette

32 Ill. App. 574
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 16, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ill. App. 574 (Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Goyette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago & Eastern Illinois Railroad v. Goyette, 32 Ill. App. 574 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Lacey, J.

This was an action in case brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error, to recover for loss occasioned by fire, to his buildings, grain, meadow and other personal property, which fire was alleged to have escaped from the locomotive engine of plaintiff in error, by negligence, while operating its railroad. The declaration consists of two counts: first, it charges negligence on the part of the plaintiff in error in not keeping its right of way free from dead grass, dry weeds and other combustible material, etc., by means whereof fire was emitted and thrown from a certain locomotive, and ignited the said grass and weeds and Avas spread, and Avas communicated over, and by the same, to and upon said lands of the defendant in error, and his property burned, etc.

The second count charges the negligence to consist in the negligence of plaintiff in error in allowing the fire to escape and be thrown from its locomotive, by Avhich it fell upon defendant in error’s lands, outside of the right of way, and ignited the dry grass and weeds, from Avhich tire was communicated to the defendant in error’s property, etc., and damages Avere sustained. The cause was tried by the court and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in error, for §1,385, and after overruling plaintiff in error’s motion for a neAV trial, the court rendered judgment in favor of the defendant in error for the amount of the verdict.

Several grounds for error are assigned which Ave will now proceed to notice. The first is, that the court committed error in not allowing to plaintiff in error a continuance upon its affidavit, after the amendment of the declaration. We do not think this ground is at all well taken for apparent reasons.

First, the decoration was only changed by the striking out of it the claim for burning “a barn” and inserting “one shed on east side of barn, 14x40 feet, and pig-shed 8x16 feet.” The barn had been insured by defendant in error before the shed on the east side was built, and after the fire, was paid for by the insurance company, and the claim assigned to it, and only the shed part was sought to be recovered for in this action, and bythe amendment the charge was limited to this.

The affidavit for a continuance is set out in the abstract, and shows that the plaintiff in error had no notice that defendant in error had any such sheds; it had no witnesses in attendance, or that could be brought there at that term of court, to give evidence as to whether they were burned or not, or their value; that by the surprise by the amendment of the declaration it was unprepared to proceed to the trial of said cause at that term of court, and that the affiant believed that if the cause was continued the plaintiff in error would be able to procure evidence before the next term of court; that defendant in error was entitled to no damages by reason of the said alleged burning of said sheds, mentioned in said amendment. The attorney for defendant agreed to admit the said affidavit in evidence under the statute, and the court overruled a motion for continuance.

We think in this there was no error. It is true that under the common law, as it was interpreted in this State prior to the passage of the present statute, on the subject of continuances, it was conclusively presumed that the defendant in any suit was surprised and was unprepared for trial whenever the declaration was amended in any material particular, and the cause had to be continued, if the defendant desired it, at the plaintiff’s costs. But our present statute has wisely changed this most absurd rule of the commonlaw, and refuses to allow a continuance except good cause is shown therefor by affidavit as in ordinary cases. Of course the amendment and its nature should be. taken into account by the court on the question of diligence on the part of the defendant offered in excuse for not having his witnesses or other evidence present.

In this case it is very doubtful whether, under the rule of the common law, prior to the statute there was any material amendment made to the declaration. The barn, according to the original declaration, would naturally embrace the two sheds claimed for, and if so, the amendment of the declaration as to the sheds does not change it, in c'aiming for the sheds only, as they were claimed for in the original declaration under the general term, barn. The fact that a portion of the property claimed for in the declaration was withdrawn, would not be a change of the declaration as to that not withdrawn. The lesser is included in the greater.

But the court allowed the affidavit to be read in evidence, and if any error was committed it was not against plaintiff in error. There is nothing in the affidavit or the circumstances to show that the court abused its discretion in not allowing a continuance, if such continuance isclaimed outside of theprovisions of the statute, on equitable principles. Such application is always directed to the sound discretion of the court. The original declaration showed that the barn was claimed for as a whole, and the plaintiff in error should have prepared itself to contest the value of every part of it. We can not see how any actual surprise could come to plaintiff in error under the ciicumstances.

At plaintiff in error’s request the jury was required by the court and did find a number of special verdicts, and on the grounds of one of these findings it insists that it was the duty of the court below, as it was requested to do, to find in favor of plaintiff in error and give judgment against the defendant in error. This is one of the main points urged here for reversal. The proposition and special finding of the jury was as follows:

1. “ Did the fire in question in this case begin on the defendant’s right of way, or did it begin in the plaintiff’s property ? ” To this the jury returned the following answer: “ No proof of evidence.” This answer simply meant that there was no sufficient proof of evidence to enable it to find which of the two the fire commenced on. From the evidence the jury could not find which of the two places the fire originated on. The answer as given was not responsive to the proposition submitted, unless the above interpretation of the verdict is correct. But taking the proposition and the verdict together, which we must do in cases like this, the above interpretation is correct. The jury did not certainly intend to say by the verdict that there was “ no proof ” that the fire originated either on the right of way or the defendant in error’s land. This would have been to squarely contradict the general verdict, which, unless the case was clear, the court should not find. All parts of the verdict should be reconciled if it reasonably could be, so as to support the general verdict. The jury was unable to find and did not find whether the fire originated on the right of way of defendant in error’s land, but found that the fire originated on one of the two spots, which they must have done in view of the general verdict ; and then proceeded to find by the general verdict that the plaintiff in error was guilty in manner and form charged in the two counts of the declaration.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ill. App. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-eastern-illinois-railroad-v-goyette-illappct-1889.